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Video Games

Artist Imagines Mythical History of 'Pong' Paddles, 'Tetris' Blocks


One of the newer and more interesting voices in video game journalism, the French magazine Amusement makes its home somewhere in the odd, rather untested space between fashion and games.

The latest issue includes more of the publication's consistently fantastic photography, including a very special series of photographs from the magazine's Made of Myth feature. In creating the series, photographer Marc Da Cunha Lopes imagined video game subjects and their components, taking up actual, physical space. From there, he wondered: if those fantastical objects were real, where would they be constructed? Answering that question with imaginatively built sets, Lopes then took pictures of Arkanoid's specialized bouncy bricks, Pong's paddles and numbers, and Mario Bros.' infamous 1-UP mushroom in its unfinished state.

Amazing stuff. And not that it matters, particularly, but we're just stuck wondering: what's real and what's Photoshop? [From: Amusement]

Web

Conceptual 'Story' Takes 1,000 Years to Read

He's already tried to enact the Law of Identity and genetically engineer God, but now conceptual artist Jonathon Keats has created a story that will take 1,000 years to read.

Thanks to clever, layered printing, his story is printed on the cover of Opium Magazine's current, appropriately dubbed 'Infinity' issue. The story being a mere nine words long (come on, is that really a story?), each word is concealed under a different layer of ink. Each layer, Keats told Wired Magazine, will fade incrementally over the next millennium when exposed to ultraviolet light. Keats intends for the piece to investigate the way that digital media has increased the rate at which we consume text.

So, go ahead; get a copy, set it outside, and hope that your future progeny will still know how to read. [From: Wired]

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Audio/Video, Web

Dutch Artist Gives New, or Old, Meaning to 'Notebook' With Video



Earlier today, we stumbled upon Evelien Lohbeck's animations via PSFK.com and found them to be right up our alley. Shunning the whole netbook craze, the recent Academy of Arts, St. Joost graduate has turned to her trusty artist's notebook to sketch her own Windows XP interface, YouTube channel, and Xerox machine -- all in one. Something tells us that her version of XP doesn't crash.

With a degree in animation, Lohbeck blurs the boundaries between drawing, the digital, and the real; her notebook can make toast and cheese, show her reflection, produce candle light, and play the opening refrain of the White Stripes' 'Seven Nation Army' on a drawn guitar. If only our drawings of stick-figure ninjas could come to life. [From: EvelienLohbeck.com, Via: PSFK.com]

Cell Phones

Woman Publishes Book of Text-Messages Sent to Dead Husband

Stored voicemails and text messages can often come back to haunt naive senders, but, in some cases, the saved messages can serve as cherished reminders of departed loved ones. After Motoo Fukuda of Hyogo Prefecture, Japan passed away in 2006 from mesothelioma caused by asbestos exposure, his 65-year-old wife Toshiko began sending heartfelt messages lamenting his absence to the departed man's cell phone.

Toshiko saved her husband's phone, keeping it constantly charged in a home shrine devoted to her spouse, according to BoingBoing. She sent text messages, such as "I couldn't live if I didn't think you were still beside me," seeking solace in the phone's vibrating alerts. After a year of sending the messages, Toshiko decided to publish a compilation, under the loosely translated title, "Job Transfer to Heaven Without Family -- I Wanted to Be With You Longer." With the publication, she hopes to raise awareness of asbestos exposure and its fatal consequences.

While this story does have tragic beginnings, we are comforted to read about somebody who has found a genuinely uplifting and worthwhile use in technology. It's far better than the endless stream of technological incidents that result in arrests and firings. [From: BoingBoing]

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Audio/Video, Cameras, Computers

Bubble Head Webcam



For those among you who like a little bit of humanity in your gadgetry, Bubble Head (not to be confused with distant cousin Bobble Head) may be just the answer to all of your webcam woes. Designed by Eric Zhang, the camera itself is mounted atop the neck of Mr. Head -- so, to gaze into the eyes of the person at the other end of the line, you simply look into the doll's eyes.

The body contains a copper skeleton that makes it super bendable, so you can configure it into any number of compromising sexual positions, and a rubbery, thermoplastic polyurethane skin makes him that much sexier. And the pièce de résistance? LEDs line the circumference of the camera, which sync with your computer's system clock to display the time in shiny lights.

Just a concept for now, but we'd be deeply shocked and equally saddened if Bubble Head doesn't get brought to life. It's kinda just too good, you know?

From OhGizmo

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Audio/Video, Computers

Artsy-Fartsy Paper Shredder

Paper Shredder
We've learned that people like gadgets that shred things. There's nothing like a wanton act of destruction in the name of productivity and interesting design. In that vein we present you with the Chrono_Shredder. Another design exercise like the Hamster Powered Paper Shredder.

The Chrono_Shredder, from Susanna Hertrich, is a red box that hangs on the wall and holds a daily calendar on a paper roll. The paper roll is fed through the shredder at a constant rate of one day every 24 hours.

The modified shredder has no 'On' or 'Off' button, making it unstoppable, just like time itself.

From Engadget

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